Giant 2012 road launch

The Avail Advanced is the women's-specific version of the Defy Advanced, featuring the same carbon construction technology but with a slightly shorter top tube and taller head tube. (James Huang/BikeRadar.com)
Giant's 2012 road bike range doesn't present the obvious visual changes we usually expect from a newly overhauled collection. The design language is still present from the current family and changes are mostly subtle below-the-skin tweaks instead of wholesale changes in direction. But it's unlikely most consumers will be upset.
Progression in materials and construction methods have allowed the company to shed big chunks of weight from the carbon frames while retaining their resilient ride quality and confident handling. The other major improvement comes in overall handling precision, which makes a significant jump with the move towards an even more oversized 1 1/4-to-1 1/2in tapered front end called OverDrive2.
We can hear it already – "Another new standard??!!" Yep, 'tis true but there's a good engineering reason for the shift and it's worth noting that Giant isn't the first company to go this route. Canyon Bicycles uses the same steerer dimension for its OneOneFour-equipped bikes and there's little debating the connected feeling that that front end provides.

Tube shaping on the Defy range is very similar to the top-end TCR, including the bulbous squared-off head tube housing the new OverDrive 2 1 1/4-to-1 1/2in tapered steerer tube.
In this case, Giant is claiming up to a 40 percent increase in "steering stiffness" with essentially no increase in weight and while we can't validate that exact number, test rides on new models confirmed that there's a tangible improvement in how well the front end responds to steering inputs and resists twisting.
If our hunch is correct, you'll likely see more manufacturers heading that way, too, as there's also minimal impact on consumers in terms of component compatibility. Giant of course will offer its own stems with a 1 1/4in clamp but other models already exist from Ritchey, Syntace, and FSA (PRO has stems in the works, too).
Interestingly, Giant has also managed to fit the bigger fork in the same head tube as before, meaning that current owners with older OverDrive front ends can upgrade simply by swapping out their fork, upper headset hardware, stem, and spacers.
All of the new frames also feature fully internal cable routing along with Shimano Di2-ready fittings and ports for batteries and wiring harnesses.
Presenting the new TCR family

The new Giant TCR Advanced SL
Sitting at the top of TCR totem pole for 2012 is again the Rabobank team-issue TCR Advanced SL. Features carrying over from the 2011 model are the familiar PowerCore extra-wide bottom bracket shell with press-fit bearing cups, the rounded rectangular MegaDrive down tube, and integrated seatpost – all with subtle shape refinements.
In addition to the improved steering precision, the latest TCR Advanced SL frame has shed over 140g – claimed weight for a medium size is now just 820g (from 968g last year). In addition, Giant says there's been virtually no loss in frame stiffness while impact durability has supposedly improved by 14 percent thanks to new nanotube-infused resins.
Giant sloughed off those extra grams through several engineering strategies. Switching to Toray's stiffer T-800 fibers required less material to achieve the same benchmarks, a new "Continuous Fiber Technology" lopped off 100g by utilizing a greater proportion of uninterrupted plies and fewer small swatches of carbon, and a number of previously aluminum bits have been changed to carbon fiber, including the rear dropouts, the bottom bracket sleeve, and new direct drop-in headset bearing seats.
A refined "Fusion" double-molded construction technique is said to yield lighter joints between the various frame sections, too, and a move to 'A-type' seat stays instead of the previous version's wishbone allowed for lighter weights without losing rear-end stiffness.
In addition, the rear derailleur hanger has been modified to provide better structural support (and thus, better shifting under load) and the non-driveside chain stay now sports a small pocket for Giant's RideSense ANT+ compatible wireless speed and cadence sensor.
The second-tier TCR Advanced is intended as the "workhorse racer" of the range, subbing in a conventional telescoping aero-profile seatpost in lieu of the SL's more flexible integrated mast (supposedly sacrificing 15 percent in rider comfort as a result) and Toray's T-700 fibers. Giant also sticks with aluminum for the dropouts and bottom bracket sleeve and uses a more conventional modular monocoque construction technique.

The new TCR Advanced
Even so, claimed frame weight has dropped from 968g to 908g and the new OverDrive2 fork only adds another 368g. The TCR Advanced will also offer RideSense compatibility and the same upgraded derailleur hanger, and Giant will again offer a proper women's-specific version called the TCR Advanced W as well with a slightly longer head tube and shortened top tube.
Filling out the TCR range is the standard TCR Composite, which essentially borrows the 2011 TCR Advanced mold but swaps in a cheaper grade of carbon fiber to keep costs low (Giant global communications manager Andrew Juskaitis says complete bikes will start at around US$1,500). Despite the inviting price point, claimed frame and fork weights are still a very reasonable 1,070g and 499g, respectively, though at this level Giant will stick to the original OverDrive front end with its more conventional 1 1/8-to-1 1/2in steerer.
It's worth mentioning that Giant has not jumped on the aero road bandwagon – at least not yet – and is instead choosing to focus on stiffness, weight, and ride quality. While the company's presentation offered some cursory data on some computational fluid dynamic modeling work done in-house, there were no claims of "X seconds of savings" or "X grams less drag".
Going the distance with Defy
Giant's popular Defy range will continue on for 2012 for riders seeking a softer ride and more stable handling. Just as before, head tubes are on average about 15mm longer than on comparably sized TCR frames, chain stays are 15mm longer, and top tubes shorten by about 10mm.
Giant isn't targeting only recreational riders with Defy, however, as a new Defy Advanced SL model has been added for 2012 for when the company's sponsored Rabobank professional team needs something a little mellower for special events like some of the Belgian spring classics.

Giant Defy Advanced SL
The new Defy Advanced SL includes the same technical upgrades as the TCR Advanced SL, including the Toray T-800 carbon fiber blends, updated Fusion construction method, the Continuous Fiber Technology lay-up techniques, an integrated seatpost and carbon fiber dropouts and bottom bracket sleeve.
The OverDrive2 front end, MegaDrive down tube shaping, and PowerCore extra-wide press-fit bottom bracket design make their way over as well but the frame shape has overall been tweaked to lend more vertical movement and a generally smoother glide over rough ground. Wispy climber-types will be especially interested to hear that the Defy Advanced SL will actually be Giant's lightest road frame for 2012 with a claimed weight of just 799g plus 330g for the matching fork.
Changes to the second-tier Defy Advanced mirror those in the TCR family, moving down a step in Toray's carbon fiber family to bring costs down to a more realistic level, swapping in a conventional telescoping aero-profile seatpost, and swapping in aluminum instead of carbon fiber parts. Claimed frame weight for the 2012 model still drops a whopping 19 percent from 1060g to 894g, though, and the matching OverDrive2 fork is pegged at 356g.
Again, Giant will offer a women's version – calling it the Avail Advanced – with similar changes to the frame geometry to accommodate the on-average longer legs and shorter torsos but otherwise making no concessions in terms of overall performance.
Similarly, the Defy Composite (and Avail Composite) borrows its mold from the 2011 Defy Advanced but swaps in a different fiber blend and lay-up schedule for cost purposes. Claimed frame weight is still just 1,090g plus 399g for the matching fork.
Finally, there's also an aluminum Defy frame coming in at 1,290g for the frame and 524g for the carbon-and-alloy fork. The women's Avail version will post similar figures.
New wheels, tires, and components, too
Giant has also opted to toss its hat into the crowded prebuilt road clincher wheelset market for 2012, offering them at aftermarket but also featuring them as original equipment on its own bikes. Top-end models were developed in conjunction with DT Swiss and borrow heavily from that company's proven technology bin.
The P-SLR1 is intended for climbers and everyday use with a total claimed weight of just 1,390g for the pair without skewers. The wide-profile rim features a 21.6mm external and 16.9mm internal width for improved ride and handling but a modest 21mm depth to keep the weight down and further smooth things out on rough ground.

Giant P-SLR1
DT Swiss provides its star ratchet rear hub guts, axle and bearing technology, and Tricon straight-pull bladed stainless steel spoke anchoring systems but Giant has specced its own hub shells with wider flange spacing for better lateral stiffness. Out back, Giant has even gone with a highly asymmetrical rim profile to even out the spoke tension between the driveside and non-driveside and made the bold decision to offer only Shimano/SRAM compatibility, allowing the driveside flange to move outboard by 2mm. Borrowing DT Swiss'sTriconspoke anchoring setup also brings with it an added bonus: a solid outer rim wall and easily compatibility with tubeless road tires.
Riders seeking a bit more speed can instead opt for the Giant P-SLR1 Aero set, which features the same hubs and rim width as the non-Aero wheels but a more aggressive 49mm depth to help cut through the wind. Even so, claimed weight is still just 1,575g for the pair but the drilled rims and internal nipples mean that the P-SLR1 Aero wheels will only be tubeless compatible after adding an airtight rim strip.

Giant P-SLR1 tires
Naturally, Giant hopes you'll pair either wheelset with its new 23mm-wide P-SLR1 road tires, which feature 120TPI nylon casings, front/rear-specific dual-density slick treads, foldable aramid fiber beads and molded-in wear indicators located right down the center of the tire where they're most useful.
OverDrive2-equipped Giant bikes will also come with the company's own stems. The top-end Contact SLR gets an absolutely gargantuan carbon fiber extension (similar in scale to PRO's Cavendish Star Series aluminum model), a four-bolt aluminum faceplate and titanium hardware – all at just 135g for a 110mm-long version and coming in a whopping ten sizes. The more conventional standard Contact comes in just 10g heavier, too, despite its forged aluminum construction. Projected availability for all of Giant's upper-end 2012 range is late autumn.
Related links
US bike and wheelset prices are as follows:
- TCR Advanced SL- ISP US$12,500
- TCR Advanced - US$4,400
- TCR Composite - US$2,650
- Defy Advanced SL - US$7,000
- Defy Advanced - US$4,400
- Defy Composite - US$2,650
- TCR Advanced W - US$3,700
- Avail Advanced - US$4,400
- Avail Composite - US$2,650
- Avail - US$1,350
- P-SLR1 Aerowheelset - US$1,600
- P-SLR1wheelset - US$1,000
- P-SL0 wheelset - US$600
- P-SL1 wheelset - US$350
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User Comments
There are 20 comments on this post
Showing 1 - 20 of 20 comments
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MattJPaul
Posted Thu 23 Jun, 10:41 am BST Flag as inappropriate
The colour scheme on the Defy is just...sorry, I threw up a little bit in my mouth.
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holiver
Posted Thu 23 Jun, 11:02 am BST Flag as inappropriate
Far too many Giant logos on the frame too!
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murph100
Posted Thu 23 Jun, 11:24 am BST Flag as inappropriate
That TCR is fugly, and whats with that awful paint scheme !
As for the 'new standard' 1 1/4 - 1 1/2, what a load of crap, Storcks have some of the stiffest front ends on the market and thats using a regular 1 1/8th HT and Steerer. Thats engineering !
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derekbiggerstaff
Posted Thu 23 Jun, 12:45 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Hasn't most of the weight been saved by lopping off the integral seat mast? If so, then it's not a saving at all.
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giant mancp
Posted Thu 23 Jun, 12:50 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
How to make an already mediocre line of bikes even uglier .....
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dawebbo
Posted Thu 23 Jun, 1:11 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Speak for yourselves, I think the TCR adv SL looks great. Shame I'm not looking to upgrade anytime soon, as this would be near the top of the list.
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Flanners1
Posted Thu 23 Jun, 2:05 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Is it not about time Giant got some decent paint and decal schemes? Current offering mirror previous years and look blimmin' awful, cheap and nasty.
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Mr Dog
Posted Thu 23 Jun, 2:58 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Whoever at Giant allowed this to be released should be sacked. Bikes by a pool? Maybe the head of PR/advertising needed a holiday.
Have to agree the colour choices are poor and harm the product. How on earth could the worlds biggest manufacturer get this so wrong. Give me a job and I'll inject so much more than this. I love my TCR's and will not be upgrading this year. Other companies will be filled with joy when they see this mess.
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Eyon
Posted Thu 23 Jun, 3:07 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Flanners1, I'll admit right up I'm a bit of a Giant fan boy, it was my first brand of bike and like a lot of people, I'm a little attached to them as a make. I do agree that some schemes are petty bad but the 2011 TCR adv SL0 is a nice colour, as is the rabobank bike and TCR Composite 1!
Manufactures schemes can be summed up as:
Giant - Still a little Chinesey
Trek - Colours and designs to make a clown proud
Specialized - Yawn, is that a bottom of the range Allez 16 or a S-Works?! Not sure look the same
Scott - Reasonable I guess if a little dull
Pinarello - Tastey Italian goodness
Cinelli - Stuck in a bit of a time warp
Cervelo - Also stuck in a time warp
Wilier - Actually I like these...
Look - Often cringeworth colour clashes
Cannondale - Tidy, even if for most of them the designers only had a black crayon
Canyon - Billboard to advertise their website
Feel free to add/adjust to my list!
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blackthorne83
Posted Thu 23 Jun, 6:37 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
oh you people have got to be kidding. These bikes look great and as far as build quality is concerned, certainly no worse than 90% of the bikes out there. The tcr advanced for one looks incredible!
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lesmitch
Posted Thu 23 Jun, 6:55 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
THESE BIKES ARE A STEP FORWARD IN LOOKS AND DESIGN/TECHNOLOGY CANT WAIT TO SEE A DEFY OR TCR ADVANCED WITH ULTEGRA DI2 THEN I WILL BUY REMEMBER GIANT MAKE THERE OWN FRAMES NOT LIKE OTHERS SO DONT KNOCK THEM COZ YOU MIGHT BE RIDING A GIANT WITH ANOTHER NAME 1 LAST NOTE THE BIGGEST AND STILL THE BEST FORTY YEARS IN THE MAKING (1972-2012)
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andylav
Posted Thu 23 Jun, 7:09 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
"Giant's new OverDrive2 system uses an even bigger 1 1/4-to-1 1/2in steerer tube - similar to the OneOneFour layout used by Canyon. Interestingly, the new steerer tube fits inside the same head tube as Giant's original OverDrive frames, too, meaning existing customers can upgrade as desired with just a new fork, upper headset hardware, stem and spacers"
How exactly does this work if the 2010/11 Giant TCR (and Defy) frames currently have a 1 1/8-to-1 1/4 headtube ?
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Alb
Posted Thu 23 Jun, 10:17 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
PRO called... they'd like their carbon track stem back! :)
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Mr Dog
Posted Fri 24 Jun, 11:02 am BST Flag as inappropriate
I see James Huang has his name on the SL. Could this be a FIFA style freebie?
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angryasian
Posted Sat 25 Jun, 1:17 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
andylav:
OverDrive 2 uses the same bearing outer diameters as original OverDrive but bigger inner diameters so yes, the new fork DOES fit inside the new head tube.
Mr Dog:
Yes, it's true, and Giant also showered all of us with freshly minted cash and there were silver platters of cocaine waiting for us in our hotel rooms.
In all seriousness, there were a lot of editors at the event and lots of bikes so the name stickers were only there so that everyone could keep everything straight in terms of sizing (saddle height and setback, stem length, etc). Each of us had a TCR Advanced SL, a TCR Advanced, and a Defy Advanced to try out during the presentation so having the names on the bikes were a good way to avoid confusion and keep us from having to constantly redo things with each bike swap.
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Wolfgang Procter
Posted Sun 26 Jun, 8:59 am BST Flag as inappropriate
I am Sorry but that is the ugliest high end bike I have ever seen. And what is this about the "New" tapered steering tube???
Did the person who wrote this ride last years Giants? They have to be one of the worst descending and cornering high end bikes in the peloton. It is recognised by those who have to race them that they don't handle. Many of the current sponsored riders have all agreed over a beer or on a quite ride that its a big step backwards from their previous bike when getting on to a giant. One such rider actually claimed it was costing him 10-15% in his sprinting ability .... a former world champ by the way.
If you get off a high end Pinarello, Cervelo, Look or the new Bianchi Oltre and then jump on last years effort from Giant ... well there is just no comparison. I have tested a lot bikes including last years Giant Rabobank edition and for cornering and descending confidence I would never get back on a high end Giant. In fact the last time I rode the Rabobank Giant was after testing the Bianchi Oltre DI2 (the best bike I tested for 2011) and I was equally shocked at how bad the Giant cornered as I was impressed by just how amazing the Oltre handled, accelerated and nothing came close to it on decent descent. A 40% improvement for the Giant .... needs to be 140% improvement to make up for lost ground already.
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swpiSStol
Posted Tue 28 Jun, 8:18 am BST Flag as inappropriate
Quite a bit of bashing going on here. True, they havn't been known for their graphics. The TCR is over done; but the SL looks like it hunts for SR-71's in the off season. But I have to give it up in terms of ride quality and cornering prowess. I own a '09 TCR advanced SL 2 (Non ISP) and I rode quite the spectrum of competitors and chose this bike over other high-end options that simply didn't deliver as well; many of which were another $1000 or so to boot, and really looks are still a personal issue and you can't please everyone. Not too mention Giant building it's own (and a lot of other companies) bikes from start to finish. Try asking that of many other snooty brands. It's easy to rip on any company for a plethora of reasons but I personally find Giant to be doing a great job in so many ways that I can forgive their lacking graphic work.
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kuolas
Posted Tue 26 Jul, 3:20 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
Cannondale uses BB30 and OnePintFive... And that's the best Engineering you can do, OverDrive2 it's just a monopolistic move.
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spankwilder
Posted Thu 4 Aug, 4:19 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
wow is it the fact giant is one of the most venerable brands going it attracts more negative criticism than most?? not the most attractive line-up, but could not fault the ride of the 2011 TCR, so will keep an open mind for a demo of one.. they should supply those air-fix stickers so you can brand it yourself.
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gypsy10
Posted Thu 18 Aug, 2:07 pm BST Flag as inappropriate
well i think the bikes are stunning i currentley have a 2011 tcr composite 1 and its like i always say i ride the bike not the grahics and giant bikes are the best keep up the good work.











































